35

I've seen a lot of examples on the web where forms are laid out like so:

<form>
    <p><input></p>
</form>

To my surprise, this is also described in the specification:

Any form starts with a form element, inside which are placed the controls. Most controls are represented by the input element, which by default provides a one-line text field. To label a control, the label element is used; the label text and the control itself go inside the label element. Each part of a form is considered a paragraph, and is typically separated from other parts using p elements. Putting this together, here is how one might ask for the customer's name:

Though this section is non-normative, it still seems to me that this is bad practice and not semantic. I suppose that the purpose is to put inputs on their own line, but shouldn't the display of these elements be controlled using CSS?

Is there a reason why the W3C advises forms be laid out this way? Am I missing something?

4 Answers 4

31

If you are writing a form in a meaningful (read: semantic) way, you will want the flow of text to lead to the element:

<form>
 <p><label for="firstName">Please enter your first name:</label><input id="firstName" type="text" /></p>
</form>

An even better way is to treat your form like a mad-libs script:

<form>
  <p>Hello. My <label for="firstName">name</label> is <input id="firstName" type="text" />...</p>
</form>

A p element isn't the only way to mark-up a form. If a matrix of data is being added/edited, it's semantically valid to use a table.

In other cases, you might not want to use a wrapping element. It depends on what content you want to be serving up. Worry about styling it all after you've got your content sorted out.

3
  • I like your second example. That definitely reads like something you would call a paragraph.
    – Radu
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:35
  • My main point of confusion is that in the example given on the W3C page the use of <p> in this case is purely for presentation. HTML5 brings forth a host of tags such as <address> and <time> which are supposed to confer semantic meaning to markup and yet the spec makes inputs and paragraphs equivalent.
    – Radu
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:38
  • 1
    @Radu, <aside>address had been around before HTML5.</aside> The meaning of the content you create is determined by how it is read. A list of commands could be an unordered list, or could be a series of paragraphs, all depending on context. A form is typically a list of requests: Name__, Email__, Password__, Repeat Password__, etc. If you want it to read as a single fluid paragraph, use one. If you want it to read as a list, use ul. If you want it to read as a set of statements, use multiple p elements. If you want it to read as a set of name-value pairs, use a table. It's up to you.
    – zzzzBov
    Aug 4, 2011 at 2:37
4

INPUT elements are inline, and therefore it makes sense to wrap them in some sort of block element, so that there is a natural separation between them. Since the DIV has no margins by default, it makes sense to use a paragraph.

3
  • 3
    The fieldset tag is a form-specific, block-level element that was designed for grouping form elements. It does a very nice job.
    – user1385191
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:32
  • By default a fieldset has a border though. Of course it can be styled to whatever, but I find a paragraph actually fits more naturally with the rest of the flow of the page. But yes, fieldset is an option. Aug 6, 2011 at 18:18
  • 1
    Fieldset has certain drawbacks, like not being able to use flexbox styling Mar 27, 2019 at 9:06
4

None of the leading CSS, HTML, and grid frameworks is using P tags.

See here: Bootstrap or Foundation.

IMHO, use fieldset and divs.

While W3C recommend using paragraph tags <p>, it makes little to no sense to follow their advice. The reason is: you are restricting yourself. That is: if you write your components using p tags you won't be able to put a div inside it. Putting <div> inside <p> is adding an extra <p>

well, why would you want to put a div inside a p tag? well... why not? for example you want to style your content in a way, or add some information. Using p tags you are stuck now. It seems to be bad advice as well to me.

The answer:

worry about styling once you got your content sorted out

It kind of assumes that you know what you will need in, say, one year from now.

My advice: you don't want to be like:

"I wish I hadn't used the restrictive P tags"

0
1

This goes for HTML 4, but maybe not for the requested HTML 5.

Ref.: 17.3 The FORM element

form needs a block-level element as child. input is an inline element. The p does the trick.

5
  • form is allowed to have block-level elements, but it doesn't restrict it from containing inline elements in any way.
    – zzzzBov
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:22
  • @Radu CSS does not change the type of an element, just the way the browser should render it.
    – Shi
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:23
  • 1
    @Shi That's how it was in HTML 4. The current HTML standard states that the content model for FORM elements is "Flow content" which also includes inline elements. Aug 3, 2011 at 23:23
  • @Shi, sorry, I moved my comment.
    – Radu
    Aug 3, 2011 at 23:25
  • 2
    The <p> example in the proposed HTML5 spec includes the same type of usage Aug 3, 2011 at 23:25

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